I read the first article of “The Dispossessed,” a five-day special report on London’s forgotten poor in the London Evening Standard. It is is quite shocking article about the city hugely divided between rich and poor. In London, the richest capital in Europe, 1 in 6 children grow up in workless households, and the number of people in low income households have risen 1.3 million over the past three years. 1.9 million of people, a quarter of the city’s population, have no or low qualifications. On the other hand, under this tough economic circumstances, huge bonuses for bankers, including some banks rescued with billions of public money, are acutely criticized, and one-off 50% levy on all bank bonuses worth more than £25,000 enforced by the government make many people feel gratified. Considering public sentiment after all the chaos banks and bankers caused, there is no other choice for bankers but to be generous and altruistic to the society. There should be some sort of brake worldwide for this out-of-control bonus to the bankers, which possibly cause another financial crisis in the future – otherwise they may be all lynched by the angry public, like what happened to aristocrats during the French Revolution. They already have enough money to enjoy their privileged life, so just downgrade from Ferrari to BMW and take £3 million flat instead of paying £5 million, during this tough time.

London’s four boroughs in East End; Islington (where we hang around), Hackney (where we live), Tower Hamlets (where Brick Lane is) and Newham, are the capital’s most deprived boroughs, where 48 per cent of children live in poverty. However, Hackney and Islington are quite close to the financial district the City, and there are some trendy areas with expensive apartments and posh stores and restaurants, side by side with the council housing blocks. Islington is the centre of the article, where the social-reforming New Labour project began: this is where former prime minister Tony Blair lived and it is here at Granita restaurant in fashionable Upper Street, that he and current prime minister Gordon Brown met in 1994 to discuss their rise to power. Blair became Prime Minister in 1997 and two years later he made his pledge to “end child poverty within a generation” and to “halve it by 2010” , but the reality is far worse than they planned. The New Labor government revitalized the economy, and as a result the country as a whole had enjoyed prosperity, but the gap between rich and the poor have widened. In the article, a boy who live in the social housing block in the heart of Upper street (photo above), but for him Upper street is ‘useless’ and there is nothing to do there. He has never eaten in a restaurant in his life, except all-you-can-eat for £5 buffet. He lives on £50 a week budget, and cannot even afford to pay for £19 college application form. His self-confidence has been crashed after he had been turned down 32 jobs without a chance to have an interview. It is an irony that this is the same area where liberal middle class “Champagne socialists,” who live around Upper street and hang around trendy Ottolenghi, talk about social justice – I am afraid that they don’t mix with people like him and have no clue what kind of life he lives through…

イズリントン区役所。昨年100万ポンドもかけてアールデコ風の区議会の議場が改装された

Islington Town Hall. Massive £1 million was spent to refurbish its art deco Assembly Hall last year